KAMPALA, Uganda — President Yoweri Museveni told the nation on Sunday that his landslide victory in Uganda's election showed the dominance of his party, which has governed this east African country for four decades.
Museveni said a day after he was declared the winner that the result gave ''a good taste of the strength'' of his party, known as the National Resistance Movement.
''The opposition are lucky,'' he said about his victory after low voter turnout in Thursday's election. ''They have not seen our full strength.''
Voter turnout stood at 52%, the lowest since Uganda's return in 2006 to multiparty politics.
Addressing the nation from his country home in western Uganda, where many dignitaries gathered to hear the president speak publicly for the first time since his victory, Museveni said that he believed many of those who didn't vote were members of the governing party.
Museveni took more than 71.6% of the vote while his closest challenger and Uganda's most prominent opposition leader, Bobi Wine, took 24.7% of the vote, according to official results rejected by Wine as fake.
Wine, 43, a musician-turned-politician whose real name is Kyagulanyi Ssentamu, has the option of launching a legal challenge with the courts, which previously have refused opposition efforts to nullify Museveni's victories while recommending electoral reforms.
Museveni, Africa's third-longest governing president, will serve a seventh term that would bring him closer to five decades in power. His supporters credit him for the relative peace and stability that makes Uganda home to hundreds of thousands fleeing violence elsewhere in the region.